1. Currently living neither in the US, nor the places it deploys these drones—and therefore unable to affect, or be affected by, the US's foreign policy re: drones;
2. and who rationally values their time;
I can't see any benefit to investing said time in analyzing US drone deployment policy. The technology of drones, however, is fascinating.
There's always the possibility that (1) will one day change. For example, when, in some state of emergency, the US decides to back one political strength over another. I'm not military or historical expert, so I might be wrong, but I could easily see this happening in countries like Mexico.
1. Currently living neither in the US, nor the places it deploys these drones—and therefore unable to affect, or be affected by, the US's foreign policy re: drones;
2. and who rationally values their time;
I can't see any benefit to investing said time in analyzing US drone deployment policy. The technology of drones, however, is fascinating.